Beautiful Audrey

Told by: Kayla

My second pregnancy started just the same as first. The morning sickness reared it’s ugly head, and I knew. My husband was so excited, as was I. We chose a midwife in a free standing birth center, and couldn’t have been happier with our choice. We were right on schedule to have a baby girl February 5th, 2014. Every appointment we had she sounded healthy. Our excitement grew as her due date came closer and closer. The 40 week mark came and went, but we didn’t mind. I woke up on Valentine’s day feeling pretty crummy, I was 41+3.

I knew she was coming soon!

I called my husband at work and asked him if he would come to the appointment today because I knew I would need his help with our 18 month old son. We had an extensive visit with our midwives about the upcoming birthing day, how I felt, and let them know I expected her within 24 hours. She checked for position (she FINALLY rolled over into the right one) and heart beat. All was well and we left with the confidence that we would have our daughter soon! We spent the night in and relaxed as much as we could, and I went to bed around 8pm so I could get some extra rest.

When I woke up at 4am with contractions, I was glad I’d done that. I knew this was just the beginning.

I continued to have minor contractions and sleep through the breaks for another 5 hours. At this point they were only about 8 minutes apart, then tapered off to 15.

I decided that a warm bath might do me some good, so with my husband sitting on the floor of the bathroom I labored about a half hour in there. I hadn’t been paying attention to the timing of my contractions much, but my hubby was. After a pretty hard one he looked at me white faced and said “We need to get you out of here and dressed. I’m calling the midwife!”

Our midwife agreed and said that she would meet us at the birth center in about 15 minutes. I got out of the tub and sat on the couch while my husband grabbed my clothes. In the time between the bath and reaching the couch I was in transition. By the time I was dressed and in the truck I was having contractions back to back and pushing against my own will.

The 10 minute drive to the birth center was the most excruciating car ride I’ve ever been on. I remember trying to hide the fact that I was pushing from my already freaked out husband.

When we arrived at the birth center the assistant midwife was trying to get my vitals as well as a fetal heart beat. After a few minutes of not finding it, they called an ambulance to transfer me to the hospital. When they loaded me up with my husband and midwife I remember looking at the clock and reading 1:13 pm. Luckily for us the hospital is right across the street from the birth center. They quickly whisked us into a room and desperately tried to find an OB close by.

The nurses were setting up the warming bed and various other baby equipment, and I remember my husband saying “Uhh, guys, there’s a head. Can someone help us?” My midwife, with no hospital rights, jumped in and delivered my daughter.

Audrey Elizabeth was stillborn at 1:18pm on February 16th weighing 6 pounds 11 ounces. She was loved incredibly, in all of her beauty. While we’re trying to cope we go on in our daily lives, simply missing something that should be there.

We’ve prayed fervently for peace, but it just hasn’t seemed to come to us yet. Some day I know that it will. For all of you struggling with loss, know that it will come for you as well.

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Her Three Words

For nearly 3 years, we at stillbirthday have supported families all over the world through our free online resources and our professionally trained and certified birth & bereavement doulas.

On Sunday, May 4, 2014 – International Bereaved Mothers day – stillbirthday officially opened doors to a brick-and-mortar building, exclusively for families who have endured pregnancy and infant loss.

The M0M Center is a place for mothers who have struggled with fertility, endured pregnancy, infant, child or even spouse loss.  If you have endured mourning along the motherhood journey, The M0M Center has something for you.

Because an authentic journey in bereavement can include a crisis of faith, church basements that offer monthly support group space for bereaved families aren’t always appropriate – or even utilized.  The M0M Center is a safe place for support, encouragement and mentoring, as well as an expanding lending library, lovely boutique of keepsake items crafted by bereaved mothers from all over the world, and opportunities for events and activities, like resting in the prayer room or crafting in the create space.

The M0M Center accepts wedding gowns to be recreated into infant burial gowns, or flannel for the tiniest shirts and diapers.

We have keepsake boxes to distribute to local hospitals.  We are a central networking location for local doulas, midwives, photographers, chaplains, and other important resources families might utilize.

But, even more recently, I held the hand of a mother as her womb was grasping to hold her departing baby.

I never share publicly about the families I support because I have never found it appropriate or necessary to do so, and in fact it is a practice strongly discouraged by our trained doulas.

But, in this particular situation, the mother not only gave me express permission, she asked for me to write on her behalf, to convey a message shared on both her heart and mine.

Gently moving her sweeping hair off of her shoulders as she and I sat together, I asked her quietly, “Would you like a drink of water?”

“No,” she said, almost a whisper.  The first word she managed to crack in some time.

Her body shifted, she began to rise from the seat.  Her eyes met mine.  Her face looked even more pale than before, as if all her body’s blood had been moving in one direction.  Worry – nay, a worry much deeper than worry, pressed through her glance.  It met my very core, and I knew instantly what it was: fear.
“I think it is time.”

Slowly rising, looking back at where she was just seated as if to look for any trace of what she had been feeling taking place just under her faded blue jeans, she turned then in the direction of the bathroom.

A few minutes pass, I look at the clock, and I hear the few moans that deepen into a bellow just before first trimester birth.

Even on the other side of the door, the sense of transition, of exchange, of separation of life, is palpable.

And the three words.

The three words, not spoken, not asked, but, shrieked.

Shrieked, in a frenzy, of motherly feelings, of maternal hormones, of the most empty lackness and yet of the most dire importance, somehow, plunging together.

It draws me in a flash to a moment I’ve had in a very large department store.  My very precocious, energetic and shall I confess undisciplined toddler scampered off down an aisle.  With me are also my youngest child, still a baby, strapped in the cart, and my older toddler, curious of the merchandise and deep in contemplation if he will present to me the chocolate or the fruit flavored cereal.  I interrupt his thoughts briskly as I grab his hand to lead him with me in the direction of my wandering son.

Turning the aisle, precious moments go by that are lost in the shuffle of the obstacle course of people in front of me.

I can’t see my son.

Body systems change immediately – I can feel my heart quicken, my chest tighten, my jaw clench and eyesight sharpen.

I stoop down to try to identify the chubby little legs among the moving trees of strangers before me.

I call out, voice checked, calmly.  Not loud enough.  Calling his name a second time, I hear my voice rise and sharpen and know the fear is creeping in.

Pushing the cart through the crowd with more force now, knuckles pasty around the handle.

Pushing faster still.  Calling more loudly now.

When I reach the end of the aisle, with no reward for the incident, fear sharpens into terror.

Rushing now.  Trying to outsmart both the boy and the process of discovering his travels.

Whirring past the aisle ends.

Realizing I’m now also giving a mental check to the passersby.  As if in my frenzy I might be able to identify a culprit if my darling son were snatched by a predator.

Pushing those thoughts out of my mind, pushing into people and screeching his name, my entire body is taken over by the ramifications of unadulterated terror.

Yes, I know what it’s like to lose a child.  It is only in this context that “loss” is applicable in pregnancy and infant loss.

Because even in the nightmare of the missing toddler, I held that cart and moved it forward, because of hope.

Hope that I could scoff at this all-consuming anguish and that, surely, my toddler is happy and safe and just beyond the breakfast cereal.

It is this experience, that washed over me in an instant, with the cry of this mother’s soul in her three, short, words.

“IS THIS HIM?”

I enter the bathroom without knocking.

I survey the birth scene quickly in my mind as I scoop down with her.  Observing such things as our doulas know to, noting to myself that I will need to keep a watchful eye on these things as entering into the emotional component of such an experience can easily become all consuming.  When a doula serves in such capacity as a lay, first trimester midwife, safety must never be forgotten, not ever.

The grocery store encounter in my mind flooding my body all over again with the same tools necessary for such a catastrophe, I breathe deeply and with a brief, almost subconscious sweep I stroke my own arm with the tips of my fingernails – effleurage – as I lower myself and sit Burmese on the cold floor, and come alongside to enter into a mother’s deepest chasm.

“IS THIS HIM?”  She repeats, her voice a shrill, high pitched octave entirely foreign to this previously composed, almost regal woman.

Interesting, that “this” is a pronoun for an object.  Her mother’s heart has cracked open and the vulnerability of such a question floods out of her.  She doesn’t know if she has her baby.  She can’t recognize him.  She can’t identify him.  What she holds might be a broken bit of young placenta – an object, an object she might otherwise discard.  Or, “this” could be a person.  Her son.

The vulnerability of motherhood is deepest in a moment such as this.

I move her hair past her shoulders again, making sure that the gesture brings with it a long stroke of my findertips down her shoulder and back.
“Let’s find out together” I whisper calmly.

This mother stops her story here, as she and I implore you, to consider that the differences between miscarriage and stillbirth are as if to say, “I am a white American” or “I am a black American.”  Diversity is worth celebrating and essential to our heritage and our joy of our existence.  Diversity is a way to honor another’s differences while confidently maintaining our own.  But when diversity is used in such a way to neglect the other’s value and only to magnify our own, it is our own downfall.

Supporing birth diversity (SBD) is a core value of stillbirthday.

Mothers give birth in the first trimester.  More often than our culture recognizes or honors.

Just as one mothers first trimester birth can hearken in the same feelings another mother has toward her living, rambunctious young child, diversity can weave seemingly unrelated experiences into a comforter soft enough we all can grab hold of, for warmth, community and love in our own darkest hour.

May this mothers three words speak into your own mother heart.

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Crystal Spock, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Canada

email: CrystalSpock.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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Discover what the SBD credentialed doula has achieved.

Jasmin Herchak, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Canada

email: JasminHerchak.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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Discover what the SBD credentialed doula has achieved.

Kathryn DiPalma, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Fresno, California

email: KathrynDiPalma.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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Discover what the SBD credentialed doula has achieved.

We Made Vows on Your Day

Told by: Maria

I found out on August 26, 2013 that I was pregnant. I was so scared,but so happy at he same time . On October 7th, I found out that I was 8 weeks and two days. I grew bigger and bigger every day, looking as if I was six months at only four. On January 16, 2014 we found out we were having a beautiful little girl, we named her Avarie Justine. At 22 weeks, we went for an ultrasound, there was signs that she may have problems, but all the tests came back negative. Two weeks later, we went for another and found that somehow over time, she had adapted to only having one artery in her umbilical cord, when before she had had both. On February 3rd, we were informed that our daughter no longer had a heart beat, we were devastated. On February 5th I was induced, at 6:00 pm, I had her at 3:22 am on Feb 6, 2014.

She was beautiful, just like I knew she would be. 14 1/2 ounces and 11.5 inches long.

I only had 13 weeks left when I gave birth to my sleeping child, no one knows what went wrong, except for God. Now I have a beautiful angel baby, and I will see her again some day. She’s our everything, and will always be our first born.

Her due date was May 15th, now we have decided that we will be getting married that date. It hurts, it hurts so bad, and I can’t help but blame myself, but I know that she was too perfect for this world, and the Lord had better plans. We love you sweet girl.

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The M0M Center

The M0M Center is stillbirthday headquarters, and you are invited to visit.

 

The name of the center is M {zero} M, but this post is labeled as M {oh} M to help you navigate correctly.

www.healingbirthcenter.com

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Benchwarming Motherhood

Sometimes motherhood isn’t heartwarming.

Like when my baby died.

And the doctor called him “debris” – as in, “We need to get that debris out of there.”

 

It isn’t heartwarming.

Especially when the death of my baby has been, is, and always will be a wound in my heart.

Even small disappointments that otherwise might seem easy to miss, when they touch this particular wound, can grow in exponential disappointment and pain.

 

This weekend is the world premiere of Return to Zero.  This countdown has been a long time coming, something we at stillbirthday have been watching with anticipation for a year!  Many, many of us are anticipating the closing captions, where your babies names will be written (in alphabetical order) right into the movie!

But, some of us will have to work on Saturday night.

Or, some of us don’t have cable.

Some of us don’t have anyone we can relate to about the importance of watching the movie, and so in frustration or shame or loneliness are not telling others that we’d really like to see it.

One less rejection, right?

But staying alone, sitting on the sidelines,

benchwarming motherhood,

it hurts.

 

I believe that the movie Return to Zero has something substantial to speak to others not impacted by pregnancy and infant loss, and will serve as a valuable platform for us to bridge the chasm and bring awareness to so much needed support.

But I also know that many of us will be sitting out this weekend.

And I don’t want you to feel alone.

It is important for as many of us as possible to rise up to watch the movie, to spread the word, to shout this victory.  Because nothing compares to having our own living children, but any voice to echo our tears from the chasm means the chance for someone to hear, someone to hear our hearts.

But it’s important for those who can’t participate, who can’t show up, who aren’t in a place yet where this is possible, to know that we who are in this chasm still see you, too.

We’re all, in this together.

Even as we might be benchwarming motherhood.

If you have felt as though you’ve been somehow benchwarming motherhood, you are invited to be heard.  You are heard.

If you can’t attend a screening of Return to Zero this weekend but wish very much that you could, please leave a comment below, and two names will be chosen to receive your very own DVD copy of Return to Zero, anticipated to be released in June.

You can’t watch the movie this weekend – but you can own it.

Benchwarming can be heartwarming, too, when we can still feel a sense of connection, of being heard.

Sending y’all lots of love and peace through this weekend,

The founder of stillbirthday,

but more than anything, a mother,

sometimes, a benchwarming mother,

Heidi Faith

 

Two random names will be drawn and announced on our facebook page on Saturday May 17 at 5pm, so “like” the page to be sure you see the announcement.

**Update: it is May 17 and the movie is about to begin.  This giveaway is staying open until Sunday May 18, as Sean Hanish, the producer himself, is giving away a DVD to the stillbirthday community.  This will make 3 DVDs given away in honor of the Lifetime world premiere of Return to Zero.**

***NAMES: Cori Bolger (12), Ursila M.(13), Carolyn (41), your names were randomly chosen.  Please visit the stillbirthday facebook page to send in a private message, or email Heidi.Faith@stillbirthday.info to connect with your mailing address to receive your free DVD copy of Return to Zero.***

You can also click here to purchase your DVD copy of Return to Zero.

In the summer of 2013 Return to Zero extended a special offer to stillbirthday to have our babies’ names listed in the closing credits in a special place at the close of the film.  If you were part of that opportunity, you can return to our 2013 posting on that to see the babies names from our community who are written into the special closing credits of Return to Zero.

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Mothering Our Mourning means giving ourselves the discipline we need to construct our expressions in healthy and healing ways, but also that we give ourselves permission that we do release, express, and share.

He Sings and so I Praise

Told by: Sarah

My heart is at peace and also saddened all at the same time…….. Our hope for this Mother’s Day was to shout some happy news, but instead our news is not so happy. On March 4th, I found out that my husband and I were expecting another child. All seemed to be going well, and we went to the doctor last Friday. First stop was the ultra sound. Our first 100% confirmation of this little life being formed inside me was evident, but what was not, was movement. The ultrasound tech didn’t say much of anything, just sent us back to the doctor’s office. We patiently sat awaiting any news. The doctor came in and was friendly, but she got straight to the point. What we were there for….Was our baby healthy and alive?

Although we had hope that it was, much to our disappointment, it was not. The baby stopped developing at 11 weeks and I was 13. There was no heartbeat. She reassured us there was nothing we did wrong, maybe the doctors weren’t 100% accurate and they make mistakes, but to her it seemed hopeless.

She gave us a few minutes to process and came back in with news from another doctor. “It is hopeless, the baby is gone.” What a dagger to the heart. And yet peace swept over me all at the same time.

I immediately knew right where my baby was….In the arms of my Savior and Lord. He WAS healthy and alive! The doctor gave us the options of allowing the actual miscarriage to take place at home, they could give me medicine to speed up the process or they could put me under and perform a procedure to clear out my uterus. I knew there was no way I was going to MAKE this happen. After all, my God is a God of miracles and He can do anything should it be His will. After a week of more evidence of the life inside me losing the battle, I began cramping and bleeding Thursday night. I knew the miscarriage was imminent, but the cramping stopped and I was able to sleep through most of the night. I woke yesterday morning feeling good. I got up and started doing my normal morning routine. I got my girls up and we started the day. After moving around, things started up again. And by 11 am, my fear was becoming a reality. Trying to stay strong and put on a happy face for my girls while going through pain and knowing what was about to happen was so hard. I was able to get the girls fed and put down for their nap and come 1:00 pm, things were rapidly happening. My mother in law was able to come help with the process and about 3:45 pm, the life that was once inside me, no longer was. An instant wave of grief swept over me as we picked up this lifeless baby.

Tears flowing from my eyes, I knew I still wanted the chance to hold my child in my hands. I was asked if I was sure and I knew I was. I needed to see, hold and tell my baby, “Mommy loves you.” I did and again peace… a reminder of the pain and suffering my child will not have to face in this world. For that I am grateful, but yet I remembered all the things I will not get to experience. No wiping tears, hearing a little voice say, “I love you mommy,” no kissing scrapes on knees, no bedtime stories, no hugs, and the list goes on and on. I knew I wanted to know what this little baby was and I asked if we would be able to tell. I looked and I saw and again…..peace.

We miscarried in December and we were hoping for a little boy then. A couple days after my miscarriage, my devotional was talking about how we need to let God do His work in our lives and to be patient, not force things and trust Him. That Abraham and Sarah had to wait a really long time for what they wanted most…..a son.

Tears streaming from my eyes, I knew that was God’s promise that I would one day have a little boy. I felt Him reassure me in that promise when I found out I was pregnant again. More confirmation came when people would find out that we were expecting and every one of them would say, “It’s a boy.” My confirmation was there. And I KNEW God had fulfilled His promise. He just never promised I’d get to keep my son. I could only rejoice in the promise God had kept and I immediately knew that God was laying a name on my heart. Jeron Robert was who this baby was. “He will sing” and “bright fame” is what it means. He IS SINGING with his two other brothers and sisters that were there to meet him. And he is and will live up to his bright fame. I had started rationalizing, questioning, searching for answers as to why.

My mother in law reassured me that I did nothing wrong and maybe there was something wrong with the baby. After closer examination of this beautiful little baby boy, we realized that he had 12 fingers and 11 toes. God knew and my body knew that there could have and would have been complications later in his life. But in our eyes and God’s he is still perfect. My father told my best…..he said, “with all those extra fingers and toes, he can do God’s work even faster.” What a sentiment…. and again tears.

I don’t understand it all, but I am so grateful that I was able to carry Jeron inside of me for 14 weeks and to me, he is a blessing, and is still my son. I am now the mother of 5 children! Who knew? I have three already doing so much more with their lives than I could ever hope or imagine for them and two beautiful girls who have the privilege and already are doing so much here! As hard as it is to lose a child, this is still a wonderful Mother’s day for me, because I am blessed to be the mother of such amazing children. I may never know Jeron as a child, but my body and heart know him. And he will forever be a child who has changed my life so much with the short amount of time he had.

Thank you all for your love, support and prayers. As we bury our son tomorrow, we will begin the healing process knowing that although his life here is over, he is still ALIVE AND WELL!!!!! Praise God!

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I Feel His Presence

Told by: Angela

I have had 5 pregnancies and only have three living children. My first pregnancy I was 16 years old and had a miscarriage at 13 weeks. My second I had a beautiful baby boy at 17 years old, full term and healthy. My third I had another beautiful boy at 21 years old it was a great pregnancy but resulted in emergency C-section, so my next was a scheduled section and it went really well, healthy baby boy at 23 years old. So when I got pregnant again June of 2013 is when we found out, I wasn’t expecting anything to go wrong. I was hoping for a girl this time around, plus my pregnancy was completely different from the boys, I was sick all the time and couldn’t eat or sleep.

I got the flu in December and went to the ER they said all was well with me and the baby. We didn’t have insurance throughout the pregnancy so I didn’t see a doctor the entire time. I started having what I thought was Braxton hicks in February, they were very strong but weren’t lasting very long or close together so I didn’t think I needed to go in yet. I lost some of my mucus plug but my water hadn’t broken yet. March 12th, my husband was working graveyards, I realized I hadn’t felt my baby move since the day before, it was like all the sudden it dawned on me, I felt like an idiot. I tried everything to get the baby to move, laying on my left side eating sweets even drank a soda, nothing worked.

I felt so defeated and devastated. I knew my baby was gone, I lay in bed all night holding my bulging baby belly and crying.

My husband got home the next morning and we got a babysitter for the older boys and went in to the L&D. They tried finding baby’s heart and could not find it so they did an ultrasound, they thought they found a very weak heartbeat and there was no amniotic fluid, the doc kept asking me if my water had broke and I finally yelled at him no! so he rushed me into surgery, when they put me to sleep I was praying to God, please let my baby be ok.

I woke up to the pediatric nurse and my doctor hovering over me telling me my baby boy didn’t make it. I was so lost and confused, I couldn’t believe what they were saying. Finally they took me to my husband, he was alone and crying and scared. They finally explained to me (they had already talked to him) that the baby had a hole in his heart, severe swelling of the brain and most likely was Down Syndrome (which would have been just fine with me) plus the cord was wrapped around his neck loosely.

I was in shock.  They said that he wouldn’t have made it on the life flight to the nearest big city that could actually do the surgeries he needed, plus his chances of making it through those were very low.

They brought him into the room and I just held him sobbing, my husband wouldn’t touch him; he was really afraid. We only took three pictures of him.  I regret not taking more, I also regret not having my older children come and meet their baby brother. We had him cremated and now his body is at home with us and around my neck, I wish everyday that he was in my arms instead. Sometimes I can feel his presence with me. I blame myself everyday for not knowing something was wrong sooner. Thank you all for listening, I hope my story can help someone else. Sterling Holden March 13th, 2014 5lbs 12oz 18inches We will love you Forever and Always

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The SBD® Doula provides support to families experiencing birth in any trimester and in any outcome.

Here at stillbirthday.info, you can learn about the SBD® Doula.